2018 World Series of Poker

Event #65: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship
Day: 2c
Event Info

2018 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
kj
Prize
$8,800,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$74,015,600
Entries
7,874
Level Info
Level
44
Blinds
2,000,000 / 4,000,000
Ante
500,000

Shack-Harris Shows One

Level 10 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Brandon Shack-Harris
Brandon Shack-Harris

With a little over 30,000 in the pot already, Brandon Shack-Harris was on the button and facing a bet of 12,000 from his opponent in the cutoff. The board read {a-Spades}{k-Diamonds}{10-Spades}{10-Hearts} and Shack-Harris made the call.

The river brought the {3-Clubs} and the cutoff splashed in another 26,000. Shack-Harris thought for a brief moment and then pushed in a stack of T$5,000 chips, which covered his opponent's stack. The cutoff wasted little time before sending his cards to the muck and Shack-Harris flashed him only the {9-Spades}.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Brandon Shack-Harris us
Brandon Shack-Harris
189,000
71,500
71,500
WSOP 2X Winner

Tags: Brandon Shack Harris

Three Players at Half a Million in Amazon Room

Level 10 : 800/1,600, 200 ante

Eric Sfez lost a few chips after being involved in a four-way pot to the {J-Hearts}{6-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds} flop. On the {Q-Hearts} turn, Mark Davidoff bet 3,100 and was called three ways including Lauren Kling, while Sfez folded. On the {5-Hearts} river, Davidoff's bet was called by one opponent and he turned over the {K-Diamonds}{K-Hearts} to claim the pot.

Nils Tolpingrud and Matthew Klapstein have approached half a million as well, while Antonin Teisseire sent one opponent to the rail with {A-Diamonds}{A-Hearts} versus {J-Spades}{J-Diamonds}. The board came {10-Hearts}{9-Clubs}{2-Clubs}{9-Diamonds}{7-Hearts}.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Eric Sfez fr
Eric Sfez
516,000
-34,000
-34,000
Profile photo of Matthew Klapstein ca
Matthew Klapstein
500,000
60,000
60,000
Profile photo of Nils Tolpingrud us
Nils Tolpingrud
495,000
318,700
318,700
Profile photo of Mark Davidoff us
Mark Davidoff
345,000
85,000
85,000
Profile photo of Antonin Teisseire fr
Antonin Teisseire
170,000
60,000
60,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Lauren Kling us
Lauren Kling
25,000
-22,000
-22,000

Tags: Antonin TeisseireEric SfezLauren KlingMark DavidoffMatthew KlapsteinNils Tolpingrud

Sontheimer Loses Big in Last Hand of the Day

Level 10 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Steffen Sontheimer
Steffen Sontheimer

Steffen Sontheimer raised to 4,000 from early position, and two seats over, a player moved all in for 134,800. Sontheimer had a tough decision to make and started talking to the table.

"It feels like such a trap, but I can't fold. I hope we have the same hand."

Sontheimer called and tabled {A-Clubs}{K-Diamonds}, only to see his opponent open up {A-Hearts}{A-Diamonds}.

The board ran out {2-Clubs}{Q-Hearts}{8-Clubs}{5-Clubs}{9-Diamonds} and, despite rooting for clubs, Sontheimer was one short of making a flush, and lost a big pot right at the end of Day 2c.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Steffen Sontheimer de
Steffen Sontheimer
210,000
-25,000
-25,000

Tags: Steffen Sontheimer

End-of-Day Counts (full)

Level 10 : 800/1,600, 200 ante

The full chip counts will be published when PokerNews receives them and a recap of today's action is to follow.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Ignacio Sanchez us
Ignacio Sanchez
627,200
4,200
4,200
Day 2C Chip Leader
Profile photo of Eric Sfez fr
Eric Sfez
551,900
35,900
35,900
Profile photo of Matthew Klapstein ca
Matthew Klapstein
531,700
31,700
31,700
Profile photo of Victor Choupeaux fr
Victor Choupeaux
521,600
61,600
61,600
Profile photo of Collen Yamagishi ca
Collen Yamagishi
504,300
504,300
504,300
Profile photo of Farhad Jamasi us
Farhad Jamasi
503,400
302,700
302,700
Profile photo of Randy Eklund us
Randy Eklund
492,000
427,100
427,100
Profile photo of Nils Tolpingrud us
Nils Tolpingrud
475,400
-19,600
-19,600
Profile photo of Cory Albertson us
Cory Albertson
475,100
421,700
421,700
Profile photo of Louis Boutin ca
Louis Boutin
434,600
342,900
342,900
Profile photo of Phil Ivey us
Phil Ivey
434,200
52,200
52,200
WSOP 11X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Andrey Pateychuk ru
Andrey Pateychuk
434,200
59,200
59,200
Profile photo of Yueqi Zhu cn
Yueqi Zhu
429,200
84,200
84,200
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Craig Trost us
Craig Trost
428,100
148,100
148,100
Profile photo of Daniel McAulay gb
Daniel McAulay
421,700
278,600
278,600
Profile photo of Nitesh Rawtani us
Nitesh Rawtani
409,500
323,300
323,300
Profile photo of Frankie Flowers us
Frankie Flowers
409,200
68,200
68,200
Profile photo of Samuel Touil fr
Samuel Touil
405,500
115,500
115,500
Day 1C Chip Leader
Profile photo of Rohan Bhasin in
Rohan Bhasin
404,600
282,100
282,100
Profile photo of Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
390,800
90,800
90,800
Profile photo of Michael Verhaaf nl
Michael Verhaaf
390,700
263,200
263,200
Profile photo of Fabrizio D'Agostino it
Fabrizio D'Agostino
381,300
146,400
146,400
Profile photo of Andrea Benelli it
Andrea Benelli
376,900
-23,100
-23,100
Profile photo of Vi Do us
Vi Do
376,200
157,500
157,500
Profile photo of Tobias Ziegler de
Tobias Ziegler
373,000
3,000
3,000

Read full

Day 3 Looms in the Main Event as Sanchez Bags the Chip Lead on Day 2c; Ivey Near the Top of the Counts

Level 10 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Ignacio Sanchez
Ignacio Sanchez

There were 3,480 survivors in Day 1c of the 2018 World Series of Poker Main Event, but at the end of Day 2c, around half of them were still standing. In total, 1,655 players will advance from Day 2c. Leading the way at the end of play on Day 2c was Ignacio Sanchez who ended up bagging the overall tournament chip lead as well with 627,200 chips, more than Shawn Daniels, his Day 2ab counterpart, who bagged up 532,500.

Sanchez put together a hell of a day, climbing up the leaderboards early, and toward the end of the night taking down a big pot from Cliff Josephy to assume the tournament chip lead. In the hand, Sanchez made a flush on the turn and shoved all in against Cliff Josephy, who also had a big stack. Josephy eventually decided to fold, but the pot worth more than 100,000 chips pushed Sanchez above all of the other players in the field.

Sanchez is a farmer who says he only plays poker one time a year, which explains why he doesn’t have a lot of cashes in larger buy-in events, but this isn’t the first Main Event that he’s played. He cashed back in 2014 as well, finishing 582nd place for $20,228. Sanchez has fond memories of the Main Event though, one of them involving former Main Event Champion Phil Hellmuth bluffing him.

"He bluffed me but I've gotten better than then,” Sanchez said about Hellmuth.

Phil Hellmuth
Phil Hellmuth

Speaking of Hellmuth, he spent much of his time in the spotlight at the Amazon feature tables on Friday as well. Hellmuth was able to run up his stack over the course of the day at the main feature table and finished the night with over 162,700 chips.

“It's the calmest I've ever been for a Day 2, I think,” Hellmuth said about his Day 2c performance. “Not to say I didn't get a little Poker Brat, but not bad. It's just a calmness... I felt like I knew where I was in a lot of hands. One guy, in particular, ended up beating me 13 or 14 hands, which was OK. I actually dealt with it well. I understand more than ever that my biggest enemy in the Main Event is myself. I need to stay calm. I need to understand just how much skill there is and how many big blinds I have at all times."

Phil Ivey
Phil Ivey

But after multiple years of hiatus, it was a different Phil who caught the public eye today. Phil Ivey bagged up one of the biggest stacks in the tournament at the end of play on Friday. Over the course of the day, Ivey made some sick calls, well-timed bluffs and value bets, and was able to bag up a stack of 434,200 chips to bring to Day 3. It’s been four years since Ivey’s last Main Event cash. In 2014 he came 430th for $25,756. He’ll look to break that streak this year.

Among others who bagged up big stacks on Day 2c were Ivan Luca (339,900), Samuel Touil (405,500), Jan-Eric Schwippert (338,600), Ludovic Geilich (333,900), and Cliff Josephy (285,400). Josephy is no stranger to success in the Main Event. It was in 2016 when Josephy made the final table of the Main Event for the first time, finishing third for $3,453,035 and, while it will take a lot for him to improve upon that finish, he’s putting himself in a position to do so by bagging a big stack on Day 2c.

“It was a lot different,” Josephy said about his Day 2. “Day 2 has been going wonderfully for me today, so it’s all good. It’s more than I could’ve hoped for. I’m very happy with everything that’s been going on.”

Mike McDonald and Veron Lammers are co-founders of the poker betting site PokerShares and have both made their way to Las Vegas for the WSOP Main Event. Not only are they sweating themselves, but they will also be sweating certain players that make deep runs in the tournament...and cheering against them. "The Main Event is the biggest time of year for us, we get the most amount of action on our site," McDonald said. "We'll be sweating all of the big bets on big players, and it's good for us when they bust," he said with a laugh.

Unfortunately, the site is not available to those residents in the United States, nor can you access the site while you are staying in Las Vegas. But hopefully, that will change with the new sports betting laws that are coming out. "We are just a small fish in the business right now but tapping into the American market would be huge for us," Lammers mentioned about the idea. "We will have to just wait and see what happens but it's definitely a great opportunity for us."

The next big event for the company will be the Big One for One Drop that will take place following the Main Event which brings a lot of traction to the site. "Lots of people can't play that tournament so for them to be able to buy some action is a nice sweat." McDonald made his living off poker tournaments in the past but has since turned to his new business and he is loving it. "I've played one tournament in between last year's Main Event and this year, so I'm a bit rusty."

McDonald will be returning with a stack of 43,800 while Lammers bagged up 54,700. Both will be looking to reach the money tomorrow but the real money for them comes from those who fail to cash.

In addition to all of those who made it through the day, there were those who fell as well. Some of those who didn’t make it include Steven Wolansky, Bart Hanson, Joe Serock, Andrey Zaichenko, Adrian Mateos Joseph Cheong, Vivian Saliba, Dominik Nitsche, David Williams, and Natalie Hof, just to name a few. Mark Newhouse, who has put together solid Main Event runs over the past few years, was also eliminated today and he’ll have to wait until next year to make another Main Event final table.

The day got underway at 11 a.m., July 6, with another five two-hour-long levels on the schedule. At the end of the night, less than 1,655 players of the starting 3,480 were left. The survivors will combine with survivors from Day 2a and 2b for a total of 2,786 players returning on Saturday, July 7 at 11 a.m. again for another five levels of play. PokerNews will be back to cover from start to finish so make sure to stay tuned in.

Tags: Adrian MateosAndrey ZaichenkoBart HansonCliff JosephyDavid WilliamsDominik NitscheIgnacio SanchezJoe SerockJoseph CheongLudovic GeilichMark NewhouseNatalie HofPhil HellmuthPhil IveySamuel TouilShawn DanielsSteven Wolansky

Event #65: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship

Day 2c Completed